Dedicated to the advancement of the State of Indiana by re-affirming our state's constitutional principles that: all people are created equal; no religious test shall be imposed on our public officials and offices of trust; and no special privileges or immunities shall be granted to any class of citizens which are not granted on the same terms to all citizens.
Advance Indiana, LLC. Copyright 2005-16. All rights reserved.

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Gary Lawmaker Questions Ball State's Oversight Of Charter Schools

Ball State University receives about $3 million annually as an administrative fee to oversee the 41 charter schools throughout the state of Indiana it sponsors. State Rep. Vernon Smith (D-Gary) questions whether the university uses the administrative fee it collects to support those charter schools because of the failure of a number of them. The Office of Charter Schools notified 7 of the charter schools administered by Ball State earlier this year that their charters would not be renewed due to poor performance according to the Northwest Indiana Times' Carmen McCollum, three of which are in Lake County.

Indiana Rep. Vernon Smith, D-Gary, questions whether Ball State has the money to support other university programs outside the charters.

"They make millions of dollars," he said. "They say all of the money goes toward the administration of those charter schools. I believe they are subsidizing something else within Ball State University. They claim it's about the children, but some of those charter schools have not been successful. They have been around for years and should have been closed."

Ball State University spokeswoman Joan Todd said the university gets no financial benefit from authorizing charter schools.

"The Office of Charter Schools does reimburse Ball State for financial, legal support services, office space and other miscellaneous items connected with running an enterprise," she said . . .

Rep. Smith said he wants to see the charter schools succeed because they are responsible for educating many African-American children.

"Charter schools have been touted as the greatest thing since apple pie," Smith said. "But with the exception of Thea Bowman in Gary, they haven't all been successful.
"And in 10 years, we should have seen success. I know that urban schools are not up to par, but charters were supposed to be the cure-all. We continue to experiment and split the dollars, which causes urban schools to struggle even more."

Ball State defends its charter school oversight, noting it derives no financial benefit from sponsoring charter schools. "The Office of Charter Schools does reimburse Ball State for financial, legal support services, office space and other miscellaneous items connected with running an enterprise," Joan Todd said. Ball State spends over $720,000 for salaries and benefits for the staff that oversees the charter schools.

What I found interesting about McCollum's report is the size of Ball State's charter schools staff. The Office of Charter Schools at Ball State has a staff of seven full-time employees, plus three graduate assistants with an annual budget of $2.9 million, to oversee 41 schools. Indianapolis' Office of Education Innovation, which sponsors 19 schools, employs nine full-time employees with less than half the number of schools to oversee with an annual budget of about $2 million.

Mayor Greg Ballard refuses to collect the administrative fee it costs to oversee the City's charter school program, the costs of which have skyrocketed over the past several years. The cost of administering the Office of Education Innovation come at the expense of basic city services, including public safety. Ballard has fought council efforts to force him to collect the administrative fee authorized by state law, which is 3% of the state funding the charter schools receive.
The City is trying to plug what it describes as a $50 million budget deficit. Ballard wants to raise property taxes on most homeowners by eliminating the homestead property tax credit to help plug that deficit.

No comments:

SUPPORT ADVANCE INDIANA

It takes many hours of time to publish content for Advance Indiana. If you enjoy reading the content of this blog, please help out by contributing. You can click on the "Make A Donation" button below to support Advance Indiana by using PayPal. Thanks to all of those readers who have made contributions in the past and continue to support this blog with your contributions. If you would rather support the blog using an alternative source of payment or would like to advertise on this blog, e-mail me at gwelsh@indy.rr.com for more information.

Blogflux

Subscribe To

Comment Policy

Advance Indiana allows you to post comments via this blog subject to the guidelines set forth herein. You understand that any comments you post are your own and are not those of Advance Indiana. You further understand that Advance Indiana is not responsible for the content of any external sites referenced in your comments. Unlawful, harassing, defamatory, abusive, threatening, harmful, obscene, profane, sexually oriented, racially offensive, or otherwise objectionable comments are not acceptable. If you think any content posted or otherwise included in Advance Indiana violates the guidelines set forth herein, then please alert Advance Indiana.
Advance Indiana reserves the right to pre-screen, edit, and remove any post as it deems appropriate. You specifically acknowledge that Advance Indiana has no obligation to display any post submitted or otherwise provided via Advance Indiana.